Bermuda is an archipelago of about 360 small
islands, 580 mi (934 km) east of North Carolina. The largest is (Great)
Bermuda, or Main Island. Explored by Juan de Bermúdez, a Spaniard,
the islands were settled in 1612 by an offshoot of the Virginia Company.
Bermuda became a Crown colony in 1684.

In 1968, Bermuda was granted a new constitution,
its first premier, and autonomy, except for foreign relations,
defense, and internal security. The predominantly white United Bermuda
Party has retained power in four elections against the
opposition—the black-led Progressive Labour Party—although
Bermuda's population is 58% black. U.S. air and navy bases, which had been
leased in 1941 for 99-year terms, closed in 1995, along with Canadian,
British army, and Royal Navy bases. In a referendum held in Aug. 1995,
nearly three-fourths of those voting opposed independence.